Abstract
The article discusses the socio-cultural causes of corruption in Russia. Corruption itself is presented as a socio-cultural phenomenon. This implies the need to assess it in a broader context than is customary in jurisprudence, where it is traditionally studied as a product of low legal culture and legal nihilism. A distinctive feature of the proposed approach is that corruption in terms of socio-cultural grounds is positioned as a result of sustainable social practices that are beyond not only legal, but also in a broad sense of axiological coordinates. Corruption is presented in the form of an adaptation mechanism, the action of certain social conditions.
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